From Cambridge, "To find a definite integral by first principles, dissect the interval into n equal subintervals, construct upper and lower rectangles on each subinterval, and find the sums of the upper and lower rectangles. Then their common limit will be the value of the integral."
My question is would it not suffice to use just either the upper OR lower rectangles and not both? I don't see the need for both :S
My question is would it not suffice to use just either the upper OR lower rectangles and not both? I don't see the need for both :S